
University of Pretoria etd – Ledwaba, M S J (2005) 12 PART 2: HISTORICAL ASPECTS University of Pretoria etd – Ledwaba, M S J (2005) 13 CHAPTER 2: THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE CPSA AND THE GRAY VISION 2.1 INTRODUCTION The purpose of this chapter is to trace the origin and development of the Anglican Church in England and South Africa. We have to discuss the factors which caused the breakaway from Rome in 1534. It is very interesting to read of the developments that took place during the time that England experienced the Renaissance ideas of nationalism, democratic government, vernacular learning, humanist art and poetry, and the influence of printing. King Henry VIII, 1509, could be called the originator of the Church of England, because of the political events that brought the general dissatisfaction with Rome to a head. The main objective of the Anglican church seemed to have been to nurture the idea of individual responsibility and the freedom of the person. A matrimonial affair was the origin of the conflict between the Kingdom of England and the papacy. Because Henry VIII was unable to get the pope to annul his marriage to Catherine of Aragon, which had not given him a son, he sought the annulment from the English clergy and proclaimed himself head of the Church of England. Those who wanted to remain loyal to Rome, Thomas More, Bishop Fisher and many others were executed. However, Henry VIII retained the essentials of the Catholic Faith in the six Articles of 1539 (Comby and Mac Culloch 1989:20). 2.2 ENGLAND BEFORE THE REFORMATION The history of England can be described through the reigns of their monarchs. We begin soon after the ending of the wars of the Roses, which destroyed many noble families, and set up, and put down, kings in the years 1455-1471. This civil war ended with the family of the Duke of York becoming Kings of England: Edward IV, his son Edward V (who only reigned for a few months before being murdered) and his brother Richard III. University of Pretoria etd – Ledwaba, M S J (2005) 14 Printing was introduced into England during the time of these Yorkist Kings. Richard III, however, was killed in 1485 by a Tudor who, as Henry VII, became the first of a new family of monarchs, the Tudors (T.E.E. Course 353 : iii). The Tudor kings and queens gradually built up England into a powerful nation. In particular, the Tudors developed England’s sea power, although most of the generation of explorers, such as Columbus, Diaz and Da Gama, came from Spain and Portugal. Henry VII, who reigned from 1485-1509, was succeeded by his son Henry VIII, who began the English Reformation. Henry Tudor (1491-1547) came to the throne as King Henry VIII in 1509 at the age of eighteen. When be became king he was handsome, talented, popular, a good rider and sportsman, a musician, who spoke Latin, French and Spanish fluently, a capable administrator, extremely religious, and married to Catherine of Aragon, a Spanish princess, who was the aunt of the Emperor Charles V (T.E.E. Course 351B, Unit 11:3). Henry VIII, a capricious man, at first attacked and persecuted Protestantism. He appointed his higher clergy. However, this and the general uncertainty about papal authority caused by the Renaissance ideas, coupled with the corruption of the papacy, account for the ease with which the majority of English church leaders followed him in a break with the Roman Church (T.E.E. Course 353A Unit 24:21). “Political and economic considerations had therefore an important place in determining the breach with Rome; in fact, the one definite thing that can be said about the Reformation in England is that it was an act of state. But, over against that, it must be remembered that merely political considerations played but a small part in determining the minds of men towards reform, though they had much to do with shaping the form which the movement afterwards assumed” (Mokwele 1988:14). 2.3 THE BREAK FROM ROME 1534 In 1509, Henry VIII succeeded to the throne of a country which could consider itself one of the brighter spots in the Western church. England and Wales were contained within the two ecclesiastical provinces of Canterbury and York. The King could look University of Pretoria etd – Ledwaba, M S J (2005) 15 back on at least a century of good relations between the Pope and the English crown (Comby & Mac Culloch 1989:46). It was Henry VIII who made the breach with Rome, mapped out the course which the Church of England was to follow, and helped to give it some of its most distinctive features. It was somewhat surprising, because Henry VIII had a good record of having no quarrel with the Church. He had a Cardinal, Thomas Wolsey, as his chancellor or chief minister. He wrote an answer to Luther called The Defence of the Seven Sacraments, which earned him the title “Defender of the Faith” from a grateful Pope (Mokwele 1988:14). In 1527, however, Henry decided that he wanted to marry a young lady of his court called Ann Boleyn, with whom he had fallen violently in love. This meant he had to get rid of his existing wife, Catherine of Aragon. Catherine had also failed to provide Henry with a male heir to the throne, so a younger wife was also a practical necessity. Henry therefore applied to Rome for a divorce or the annulment (setting aside) of his marriage. The Pope, Clement VII, hesitated, reluctant to risk offending Catherine’s powerful nephew, the emperor Charles V (Comby & Mac Culloch 1989:47). The fact that Henry broke with the Vatican in order to secure the intended divorce from Catherine of Aragon, has led to a misrepresentation of the English Reformation, especially in Roman Catholic countries, where all the facts were not known. Catherine was the widow of Henry’s deceased brother, Arthur, and it was clearly against scripture and Canon law for the Pope to grant, in the first place, a dispensation permitting the marriage (Mark 10:1-12). This was the emphatic opinion of Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury, and of every bishop in England except two. Many of the universities of Europe held the same view (Mokwele 1988:15). For political reasons, however, Ferdinand of Spain and Henry VII of England eagerly wanted the marriage, and brought pressure to bear upon Prince Henry and Catherine, and even upon Pope Julius II, for, at first, all of them had scruples about it (Mokwele 1988:15). University of Pretoria etd – Ledwaba, M S J (2005) 16 In the end the unfortunate Anne Boleyn, who bore him a daughter, Elizabeth, was beheaded on the ground of adultery. His third wife, Jane Seymour, bore him a son, Edward. But she was deposed and Henry’s string of marriages continued – Anne of Cleves, Catherine Howard and Catherine Parr. We can conclude that the break with Rome therefore was more of a personal and political matter than an issue of fundamental religious principle (Pillay and Hofmeyr 1991:159). The year 1553AD is usually regarded as the beginning of the history of the Church of England. It was in that year that the supreme authority of the Pope was denied, and His Majesty Henry VIII was proclaimed “so far as the law of Christ will allow, Supreme Head of the English church and clergy” (Mphahlele 1978:11). If the King as head of the church could issue creeds and decide doctrine, he needed to have some sort of authority. England founded the sources for the King’s authority in history: Scripture, the ancient creeds (the Apostles’, the Nicene and the Athanasian), and the first four ecumenical councils of the church up to the council of Chalcedon in 451 were accepted as valid sources of doctrine. Clergy and others who refused to take the Second Oath of Supremacy were persecuted and a number were martyred (including the Lord Chancellor of England, Thomas More, the friend of Colette and Erasmus). There was also an uprising in the north of England (the Pilgrimage of Grace) against the religious changes (Comby & Mac Culloch 1989:47). Thereafter the Pope forbade adherents in England to remain in communion with the English Church. The Church of England, however, broke away from the Catholic Church and adopted the current Protestant doctrine. Rome protested against this, arguing that Archbishop Parker of Canterbury was not validly consecrated (Mphahlele 1978:12). The English Parliament was used to make a complete break with Rome, the decisive step being the parliamentary Act of Supremacy of 1534 (Comby & Mac Culloch 1989:47). But, with the actual breach accomplished, other causes of disagreement arose. The Church of England had broken with the Papal See, but was it Protestant? Henry himself was by nature a conservative in churchmanship; he clung to the old ways, and took some pride in his reputation for orthodoxy (Mokwele 1988:16). University of Pretoria etd – Ledwaba, M S J (2005) 17 In 1534 the Convocation (the meeting of all the clergy) and Parliament passed the Second Act of Supremacy which declared that Henry was the only supreme head of the church in England and that the Pope (that other “foreign bishop”) had no more authority in England”. All the clergy had to take an oath to accept Henry as head of the church. Henry next issued two creeds, The Ten Articles of Faith in 1536 and The Six Articles of Faith in 1539. These creeds stayed closed to traditional Catholic teaching, except in rejecting the authority of the pope.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages102 Page
-
File Size-